# A sample Guardfile
# More info at https://github.com/guard/guard#readme

## Uncomment and set this to only include directories you want to watch
# directories %w(app lib config test spec features) \
#  .select{|d| Dir.exists?(d) ? d : UI.warning("Directory #{d} does not exist")}

## Note: if you are using the `directories` clause above and you are not
## watching the project directory ('.'), then you will want to move
## the Guardfile to a watched dir and symlink it back, e.g.
#
#  $ mkdir config
#  $ mv Guardfile config/
#  $ ln -s config/Guardfile .
#
# and, you'll have to watch "config/Guardfile" instead of "Guardfile"

group :all_plugins, halt_on_fail: true do
  guard :bundler do
    require 'guard/bundler'
    require 'guard/bundler/verify'
    helper = Guard::Bundler::Verify.new

    files = ['Gemfile']
    files += Dir['*.gemspec'] if files.any? { |f| helper.uses_gemspec?(f) }

    # Assume files are symlinked from somewhere
    files.each { |file| watch(helper.real_path(file)) }
  end

  # Note: The cmd option is now required due to the increasing number of ways
  #       rspec may be run, below are examples of the most common uses.
  #  * bundler: 'bundle exec rspec'
  #  * bundler binstubs: 'bin/rspec'
  #  * spring: 'bin/rspec' (This will use spring if running and you have
  #                          installed the spring binstubs per the docs)
  #  * zeus: 'zeus rspec' (requires the server to be started separately)
  #  * 'just' rspec: 'rspec'

  guard :rspec, cmd: 'bundle exec rspec', all_on_start: true, all_after_pass: true do
    require 'guard/rspec/dsl'
    dsl = Guard::RSpec::Dsl.new(self)

    # RSpec files
    rspec = dsl.rspec
    watch(rspec.spec_helper) { rspec.spec_dir }
    watch(rspec.spec_support) { rspec.spec_dir }
    watch(rspec.spec_files)

    # Ruby files
    watch(%r{^lib/(.+)\.rb$}) { |m| "spec/#{m[1]}_spec.rb" }
  end

  guard :rubocop do
    watch(/.+\.rb$/)
    watch(%r{(?:.+/)?\.rubocop\.yml$}) { |m| File.dirname(m[0]) }
  end
end
